According to the blog post, computers detect most of the videos that end up getting taken down.

It said 6.7 million videos were first flagged for review by machines, not humans.

Of those, 76% were taken down before receiving any views from users.

Last week, a CNN investigation found ads from over 300 companies and organizations that ran on YouTube channels promoting white nationalists, Nazis, North Korean propaganda and other controversial or extremist content.

In the past, ads have appeared on ISIS videos and other extremist and hateful content.

According to YouTube, no Middle East ads were taken down unless they were harmful to the community.

“I do think it’s an underlying issue with YouTube’s business model,” Nicole Perrin, a senior analyst at eMarketer, reported CNN last week.

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